From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition

Abstract Climate change is altering the conditions for tree recruitment, growth, and survival, and impacting forest community composition. Across southeast Alaska, USA, and British Columbia, Canada, Callitropsis nootkatensis (Alaska yellow‐cedar) is experiencing extensive climate change‐induced cano...

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Main Authors: Sarah M. Bisbing, Brian J. Buma, Lauren E. Oakes, John Krapek, Allison L. Bidlack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5383
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spelling doaj-69b874a40cd643609740be9ed95cb94e2021-03-02T06:01:53ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582019-07-019148157817410.1002/ece3.5383From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest compositionSarah M. Bisbing0Brian J. Buma1Lauren E. Oakes2John Krapek3Allison L. Bidlack4Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science University of Nevada – Reno Reno Nevada USADepartment of Integrative Biology University of Colorado, Denver Denver Colorado USADepartment of Earth System Science Stanford University Stanford California USADepartment of Natural Sciences University of Alaska Southeast Juneau Alaska USAAlaska Coastal Rainforest Center University of Alaska Southeast Juneau Alaska USAAbstract Climate change is altering the conditions for tree recruitment, growth, and survival, and impacting forest community composition. Across southeast Alaska, USA, and British Columbia, Canada, Callitropsis nootkatensis (Alaska yellow‐cedar) is experiencing extensive climate change‐induced canopy mortality due to fine‐root death during soil freezing events following warmer winters and the loss of insulating snowpack. Here, we examine the effects of ongoing, climate‐driven canopy mortality on forest community composition and identify potential shifts in stand trajectories due to the loss of a single canopy species. We sampled canopy and regenerating forest communities across the extent of C. nootkatensis decline in southeast Alaska to quantify the effects of climate, community, and stand‐level drivers on C. nootkatensis canopy mortality and regeneration as well as postdecline regenerating community composition. Across the plot network, C. nootkatensis exhibited significantly higher mortality than co‐occurring conifers across all size classes and locations. Regenerating community composition was highly variable but closely related to the severity of C. nootkatensis mortality. Callitropsis nootkatensis canopy mortality was correlated with winter temperatures and precipitation as well as local soil drainage, with regenerating community composition and C. nootkatensis regeneration abundances best explained by available seed source. In areas of high C. nootkatensis mortality, C. nootkatensis regeneration was low and replaced by Tsuga. Our study suggests that climate‐induced forest mortality is driving alternate successional pathways in forests where C. nootkatensis was once a major component. These pathways are likely to lead to long‐term shifts in forest community composition and stand dynamics. Our analysis fills a critical knowledge gap on forest ecosystem response and rearrangement following the climate‐driven decline of a single species, providing new insight into stand dynamics in a changing climate. As tree species across the globe are increasingly stressed by climate change‐induced alteration of suitable habitat, identifying the autecological factors contributing to successful regeneration, or lack thereof, will provide key insight into forest resilience and persistence on the landscape.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5383Callitropsis nootkatensisclimate changecommunity compositiondiversityforest mortalityyellow‐cedar decline
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah M. Bisbing
Brian J. Buma
Lauren E. Oakes
John Krapek
Allison L. Bidlack
spellingShingle Sarah M. Bisbing
Brian J. Buma
Lauren E. Oakes
John Krapek
Allison L. Bidlack
From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
Ecology and Evolution
Callitropsis nootkatensis
climate change
community composition
diversity
forest mortality
yellow‐cedar decline
author_facet Sarah M. Bisbing
Brian J. Buma
Lauren E. Oakes
John Krapek
Allison L. Bidlack
author_sort Sarah M. Bisbing
title From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
title_short From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
title_full From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
title_fullStr From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
title_full_unstemmed From canopy to seed: Loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
title_sort from canopy to seed: loss of snow drives directional changes in forest composition
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Climate change is altering the conditions for tree recruitment, growth, and survival, and impacting forest community composition. Across southeast Alaska, USA, and British Columbia, Canada, Callitropsis nootkatensis (Alaska yellow‐cedar) is experiencing extensive climate change‐induced canopy mortality due to fine‐root death during soil freezing events following warmer winters and the loss of insulating snowpack. Here, we examine the effects of ongoing, climate‐driven canopy mortality on forest community composition and identify potential shifts in stand trajectories due to the loss of a single canopy species. We sampled canopy and regenerating forest communities across the extent of C. nootkatensis decline in southeast Alaska to quantify the effects of climate, community, and stand‐level drivers on C. nootkatensis canopy mortality and regeneration as well as postdecline regenerating community composition. Across the plot network, C. nootkatensis exhibited significantly higher mortality than co‐occurring conifers across all size classes and locations. Regenerating community composition was highly variable but closely related to the severity of C. nootkatensis mortality. Callitropsis nootkatensis canopy mortality was correlated with winter temperatures and precipitation as well as local soil drainage, with regenerating community composition and C. nootkatensis regeneration abundances best explained by available seed source. In areas of high C. nootkatensis mortality, C. nootkatensis regeneration was low and replaced by Tsuga. Our study suggests that climate‐induced forest mortality is driving alternate successional pathways in forests where C. nootkatensis was once a major component. These pathways are likely to lead to long‐term shifts in forest community composition and stand dynamics. Our analysis fills a critical knowledge gap on forest ecosystem response and rearrangement following the climate‐driven decline of a single species, providing new insight into stand dynamics in a changing climate. As tree species across the globe are increasingly stressed by climate change‐induced alteration of suitable habitat, identifying the autecological factors contributing to successful regeneration, or lack thereof, will provide key insight into forest resilience and persistence on the landscape.
topic Callitropsis nootkatensis
climate change
community composition
diversity
forest mortality
yellow‐cedar decline
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5383
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